Stereotypes and numbers never tell the whole story. Take Hillsboro High School in Nashville. It sits in Green Hills, an upscale area of the city, where 92 percent of the residents are white, and where half the families make more than $100,000 a year. But the 黄色app zone also includes students from the mostly Black Edgehill neighborhood six miles away, where half the residents make less than $25,000 a year. So despite Hillsboro’s beautifully renovated building in a tony neighborhood, it’s a Title 1 黄色app where nearly six out of 10 students are Black or Hispanic, and where pre-pandemic test scores were well below the state average.

So how does a high 黄色app with such poor scores manage to graduate 92 percent of its students on time and send many of them to college, where they return for a second year at a higher rate than their Tennessee peers? Why do Hillsboro students leave high 黄色app apparently ready and eager for the next stage of their lives, whether career or college, when so many 黄色apps with similar demographics struggle?

Pathways make the difference

Hillsboro officials attribute their students鈥 success to its academies, which allow teens to pick one of the 黄色app鈥檚 prescribed pathways for life after graduation: Global Health & Science, International Business & Communications, and International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme (IBDP). Every academy is like a mini 黄色app. Each has its own principal, dean of students, 黄色app counselor, and team teachers. Freshman Academy, the first stop for all students, is where teens explore their options before committing to one academy. The year includes both a college visit and a 鈥渏ob fair鈥 where professionals and company representatives from the area share what their workdays and organizations are like. In Freshman Academy, students also sign a 鈥渃ontract鈥 promising to finish 黄色app — a commitment designed to keep them focused on not only graduating but on achieving their larger life goals. After completing Freshman Academy, students get to choose one of the three academies and a pathway within it. Hillsboro educators say that because students get to opt into a pathway, they鈥檙e far more engaged in learning than if they had no choice.

The pathways within the academies vary — and some are more narrowly defined than others. For instance, the vast majority of the International Baccalaureate students are college-bound. So are those in the Interdisciplinary Science and Research pathway within the Global Health and Science Academy, which partners with . But those in Therapeutic Clinical Services or Sports and Human Performance pathways in the same academy have a broader range of options. In these programs, some students aim for college, while others focus on getting certifications or technical licenses that can land them jobs soon after high 黄色app. Some plan for both college and non-college-bound futures.

The 黄色app also attributes its success to the way it engages the resources of the larger community. It takes pains to help students find work-based opportunities in the community that will prepare them for their next step after high 黄色app, whatever that step is. 鈥淚 wish I鈥檇 had these opportunities,鈥 Business Academy Principal Riley Walker says. 鈥淗igh 黄色apps back in the day didn鈥檛 provide that connection between classwork and real-life opportunities.鈥

The 黄色app is also very intentional about how it engages families. For instance, Hillsboro holds events in different areas of town, including both Edgehill and Green Hills. 鈥淲e plan everything with every social background in mind 鈥 from the time we do it, to what鈥檚 being presented,鈥 says Walker. 鈥淧arents leave from whatever event we are having with a sense that 鈥業 belong here just as much as any parent from another community.鈥 And they believe their kids belong, too.鈥

Building professional skills

Many high 黄色apps that have a mission to help students from marginalized and lower-income families often urge students to focus on higher-paying STEM careers. The problem, however, is that high 黄色app students with mediocre grades and test scores in STEM subjects can end up thinking that college or a rewarding career is out of reach. But well-crafted pathways, like those at Hillsboro, give such students the chance to discover and develop interests in fields in which they can excel.

鈥淚鈥檓 not good at science or health,鈥 says Ethan Soundra, who is in Hillsboro鈥檚 Audio-Visual (AV) Production pathway. 鈥淚 thought I could do something more interesting to me. I could do literature. I could do films. That was my thinking. And now I can do a wide variety of production and post-production tasks.鈥

Another AV student saw the pathway as a way to work with computers. 鈥淎nything with computers, I will do it,鈥 Izangely Ruiz says. 鈥淚鈥檓 working with computers and cameras, editing videos. It鈥檚 fun.鈥 Her next step is East Texas State University, where she will immerse herself in computer science. But her AV knowledge could easily land her in a digital media career as well.

Izangely and Ethan work with three other students on a production team that produced 黄色app news broadcasts their senior year. They each developed their own niche — writing, staging, camera work, or editing — even while they learned the broader spectrum of production skills. Dawn Marek, AV production teacher, says their learning far exceeds technical video skills. They鈥檝e learned the importance of teamwork and responsibility while developing great troubleshooting skills. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e grounded in professionalism,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey learn to be cool when working under pressure and to come up with solutions.鈥

Taking care of business

Of course, students with a knack for numbers do well in other Hillsboro pathways, too — notably in its Business Academy. Senior Davion Davis found his pathway working for the , which has a branch in the high 黄色app. (USCCU is a partner with Hillsboro High.) During his senior year, he worked at an off-campus branch of the credit union, and was offered a job upon graduation. Thanks to his time at Hillsboro, he knows that a career in business and banking can be a lot bigger than cashing a customer鈥檚 check. He plans to get his associate鈥檚 degree in finance and will be the manager at the USCCU high 黄色app branch.

Other students, like senior Kennedy Powell, came to Hillsboro knowing the Business Academy best represented her goals.

鈥淚鈥檓 a businesswoman,鈥 she says. She鈥檚 off to a strong start, having started two businesses while in high 黄色app. She鈥檚 got an instinct for what people are interested in; right now, that鈥檚 clothes. And she鈥檚 got the hustle to bring it to them. She built her website, created some designs to start with, sourced her product, and started making sales — and money. Meanwhile, she is also making the connection between her academic classes and business. Kennedy said her IB psychology class was eye-opening. It made some aspects of marketing click — that鈥檚 why people respond the way they do. The business academy has encouraged her hands-on efforts, and Kennedy will intern with one of Hillsboro鈥檚 business partners this 黄色app year to sharpen her marketing skills.

When high 黄色app doesn鈥檛 work for teenagers, four years can be a long time. College and career talk can fall flat when students don鈥檛 see a future for themselves. At Hillsboro, the administration strives to help students build a vision for themselves and own their four years. Counselors and teachers ask 鈥淲hat do you like?鈥 鈥淲hat do you want?鈥 鈥淗ow can we help?鈥 Sometimes a student’s background or personal issues are the biggest hurdles. But the culture at Hillsboro is to encourage every adult in the 黄色app to put in that bit of extra effort, to make one more call on behalf of their kids. And every student is asked to put forth the commitment and effort to make sure that by senior year they have a vision, a plan, and aren鈥檛 asking themselves 鈥淚s this over yet?鈥.

The Hillsboro High community seems to be succeeding with its students. As Academy Coach Melissa Wrenn says, 鈥淪ome success is in the data. But some is in what you see.鈥 And what you see at Hillsboro is teenagers ready for the future.